We saw a lot of phones at Mobile World Congress this week. Here's everything we didn't cover as comprehensively as Samsung and LG's smartphone launches.

Samsung and LG may have stolen the show at Mobile World Congress, but there were plenty of other OEMs also attempting to strut their stuff—and we managed to go hands-on with several of them. Here are some of the other smartphones we saw at MWC this week.

Alcatel spent this year’s MWC completely revamping its image. The company dropped One Touch from its name, revealed a more modern logo, and announced both the the 5.2-inch Idol 4 (pictured here), and the 5.5-inch Idol 4S. Both phones resemble a design Samsung would have produced if it had iterated on the Galaxy SIII.

The Idol 4 packs a Qualcomm Snapdragon 617, and the Idol 4S runs on a Snapdragon 642, which powers a QuadHD display. Both phones also feature 3GB of RAM, though the 4S can store more with its 32GB of storage.

The Idol 4 (pictured here) and Idol 4S come packed with impressive camera specifications. Both phones come with an 8-megapixel front-facing camera, but different rear-facing shooters. The Idol 4 shoots with a 13MP rear-facing camera, while the Idol 4S has a 16MP camera. The latter can also record 4k video and shoots at 60fps in 1080p.

As an added bonus, both the Idol 4 (pictured here) and Idol 4S come with plastic packaging that doubles as a virtual reality headset—a slightly more polished version of Google Cardboard, if you will. They also come preloaded with their own VR app store, where you can download compatible content.

I had honestly never heard of Wiko until I walked by their booth at MWC. A quick Google search reveals that they’re a phone manufacturer based in France.

The Wiko Fever is, interestingly, a glow-in-the-dark smartphone. Its chassis features a flourescent layer that glows ever-so-slightly, so you can see where your phone is in a dark room.

The Fever has a 5.2-inch FullHD display and runs on a 1.3GHz MediaTek processor, 3GB of RAM, and a 3,000 mAh battery pack. It also boasts Android 6.0 Marshmallow with Wiko UI on top, which adds a “Smart Left Page” information hub, a la the Google Now launcher.

HTC is still plugging along with its low-end to mid-range Desire line, though it’s trying something a little different with the design this time around.

The Desire 530 features a speckled paint finish clearly inspired by Jackson Pollock. The phone is super cute in person, though its Snapdragon 210 processor and 8-megapixel rear-facing camera are a little too low-end for my liking. HTC said these phones likely won’t make it to the U.S.

The One X9 is another smartphone that HTC won’t be bringing to the U.S., but that’s because it’s the sister-phone to the One A9.

The One X9 is outfitted in the same brushed aluminum chassis as the A9. It shoots with a 13-megapixel rear-facing camera and 5MP front-facing camera. It also runs on a MediaTek Helio X10 and is powered by a 3,000mAh battery pack.

ZTE proved its design capabilities with last year’s Axon, but it hardly flexed its muscles with the Blade V7. It doesn’t just merely resemble an iPhone, it blantantly copies it. This is just lazy phone design.

The V7 features a 5.2-inch display and runs on a 1.3GHz octa-core MediaTek processor and 2GB of RAM. It also comes with 16GB of onboard storage, a 13-megapixel rear-facing camera, and a 5MP front-facing camera. It ships with Android 6.0 Marshmallow and will be primarily marketed to China, Germany, Spain, and their neighboring countries. But that’s okay: The last thing the US needs is another iPhone wannabe.